Dorsomedial frontal cortex damage impairs error-based, but not reinforcement-based motor learning in humans

Author:

Palidis Dimitrios J12ORCID,Fellows Lesley K12

Affiliation:

1. Montreal Neurological Institute , Department of Neurology & Neurosurgery, , Montreal, QC H3A 2B4 , Canada

2. McGill University , Department of Neurology & Neurosurgery, , Montreal, QC H3A 2B4 , Canada

Abstract

Abstract We adapt our movements to new and changing environments through multiple processes. Sensory error-based learning counteracts environmental perturbations that affect the sensory consequences of movements. Sensory errors also cause the upregulation of reflexes and muscle co-contraction. Reinforcement-based learning enhances the selection of movements that produce rewarding outcomes. Although some findings have identified dissociable neural substrates of sensory error- and reinforcement-based learning, correlative methods have implicated dorsomedial frontal cortex in both. Here, we tested the causal contributions of dorsomedial frontal to adaptive motor control, studying people with chronic damage to this region. Seven human participants with focal brain lesions affecting the dorsomedial frontal and 20 controls performed a battery of arm movement tasks. Three experiments tested: (i) the upregulation of visuomotor reflexes and muscle co-contraction in response to unpredictable mechanical perturbations, (ii) sensory error-based learning in which participants learned to compensate predictively for mechanical force-field perturbations, and (iii) reinforcement-based motor learning based on binary feedback in the absence of sensory error feedback. Participants with dorsomedial frontal damage were impaired in the early stages of force field adaptation, but performed similarly to controls in all other measures. These results provide evidence for a specific and selective causal role for the dorsomedial frontal in sensory error-based learning.

Funder

Canadian Institutes for Health Research

McGill Cognitive Neuroscience Research Registry

Canada First Research Excellence Fund Healthy Brains for Healthy Lives award to McGill University

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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